India is expected to have an export-to-GDP ratio of 20.8% this year; in 2013-14, India's export-to-GDP ratio was 25.4%
If energy prices remain this high for a year, they could shave 3 per cent off India's GDP, weaken the currency
China on Saturday lowered its GDP target to 5.5 per cent for this year from last year's 6.1 per cent. The new target for the second-largest economy was announced by Premier Li Keqiang in his work report presented to the National People's Congress (NPC), the country's parliament which opened its annual session here on Saturday. China's economy grew by 8.1 per cent in 2021 to about USD 18 trillion a performance that was stated to be the best in a decade. The pace of the growth was well above the government target of above six per cent in 2021. In his work report presented to the NPC, Li said China plans to create more than 11 million new jobs in 2022. He said China plans to cut the ratio of its deficit to GDP to around 2.8 per cent for the year of 2022. The fundamentals of China's economy remain unchanged, and the nation will maintain long-term growth, he said. Over 2,800 members attended the NPC which will meet here for over a week to transact the annual legislative work.
Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal on Thursday asked the industry to look at ways to increase the contribution of the manufacturing sector to 25 per cent of GDP and set up 10 R&D labs or innovation centres to become a global leader in technology. He also said the industry should make all-out efforts to increase the share of exports to about 25 per cent of the GDP (gross domestic product). Addressing the closing session of the DPIIT's webinar on 'Make in India for the World', he talked about a five-point vision for boosting manufacturing and promoting exports. "How can we really take our manufacturing contribution to the GDP to 25 per cent? Can we increase our global trade to 10 per cent of the size of our economy?... These are ambitious targets but, I think, doable. "Can we look at being one of the top-three nations in services exports? Can we look at supporting MSMEs (micro, small and medium enterprises) to increase their participation in foreign trade," Goyal ...
The 8.9 per cent GDP growth in FY22 (9.2 per cent prelim estimates) partly also captures past revisions
The NSO also released the GDP data for October-December (Q3) of FY22
Estimate of GDP growth for current year lowered
In the current fiscal, GDP growth stood at 20.3% in April-June quarter and 8.5% in July-September period
While an adverse base was expected to flatten growth in the quarter from 8.5% in Q2FY22, NSO's initial estimates are sorely below our expectation of a 6.2% YoY expansion in that quarter
The share of consumption and government expenditure has come down in FY22, which is reflective of the economy not yet being fully back on track
Congress leader P Chidambaram on Monday said instead of indulging in "vain boasts" it should put out a reasoned paper on why it expects real GDP growth to be over 8 per cent in 2022-23
India's gross domestic product (GDP) is likely to grow at 5.8% in the third quarter of fiscal 2022 from October to December, says Ecowrap- SBI's research report.
Revising outlook on state finances to improving in FY23 from, Ind-Ra expects the aggregate fiscal deficit of states to stand at 3.6% of their GDP from 3.5% in FY22 on back of robust revenue growth.
Gross domestic product (GDP) grew 6.1% year-on-year in the fourth quarter, the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) said, slightly higher than the 5.9% growth in the government's advance estimate
Manufacturing, construction to drive growth on back of PLIs & spending on infra
There is no question of a slowdown or recession, said Sitharaman, as she cited an estimated 9.2 per cent GDP growth in the current fiscal year ending March 31
Nirmala Sitharaman on Friday said in the Rajya Sabha that the Budget 2022-23 stood for continuity, was forward looking and has a vision for 'India at 100'.
Union Revenue Secretary Tarun Bajaj on Friday said that the country's fiscal deficit will come down once revenues start to grow. Speaking at a webinar organised by the Bengal Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI), Bajaj said that the government had adopted a loose fiscal policy on the backdrop of increased capital expenditure. "The fiscal deficit at present is 6.9 per cent of the GDP. The target for 2025-26 is to bring down to 4.5 per cent. If we continue to grow our revenues, the fiscal deficit can come down by 0.1 or 0.2 per cent", he said. Next year, the targeted fiscal deficit is 6.4 per cent, Bajaj said, adding that the government had the opportunity to lower it further. "But increased capital expenditure by almost 35 per cent had forced us to keep the fiscal level at that level", he added. The Revenue secretary said since last year, the Centre had started giving money to the states for making capital expenditure. Unless this is done, the last mile infrastructure will not
Based on Sitharaman's statement, the finance ministry's own real GDP projection is closer to that of the Reserve Bank of India
Despite the wobble in the markets over the past few weeks, Indian equities remain expensive as measured by several yardsticks